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Conference thebay::joyoflex

Title:The Joy of Lex
Notice:A Notes File even your grammar could love
Moderator:THEBAY::SYSTEM
Created:Fri Feb 28 1986
Last Modified:Mon Jun 02 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1192
Total number of notes:42769

371.0. "It was a Dark and Stormy Night" by THEBAY::WAKEMANLA (Tall Duck and Handsome) Wed Jun 24 1987 18:14

        Well I found a contest for you budding authors out there.  The
    "Bulwer-Litton Fiction Contest" tries to find the epitome of bad
    opening sentances.  The contest is named after Edward George Earle
    Bulwer-Litton who came up with the title for this topic.  His
    popularity was second only to Charles Dickens in the late 19th century
    England.
    
    The founder of this contest is Scott Rice, a professor of English
    at California State University as San Jose (or San Jose State for
    the locals).  It started as an exercise for one of his classes to
    show what is good writing by exploring the bad and has grown to
    national proportions with over 10,000 entries this last year.
    
    Rice talks about a couple of formulae for bad writing, the first
    being the practice of memorizing a lot of big words, and inserting
    them freely into the prose.  This method is called the "Howard Cosell
    school" and was used in this years winning entry (and was awarded
    the first prize of an Apple Mackintosh):
    
	"The notes blatted skyward as the sun rose over the Canada 
	Geese, feathered rumps pedaling unseen bicycles in their 
	search for sustenance, driven by cruel Nature's maxim, ya 
	wanna eat, ya gotta work, and at least I know Pittsburgh."
    
    Rice also commented, "Originality is like happiness, you can't pursue
    it for its own sake.  If you set out to be original for originality's
    sake, you will simply be eccentric."  The winner in this category
    is:
    
    	"The sun rose slowly, like a fiery furball coughed up uneasily
	onto a sky-blue carpet by a giant unseen cat."
    
    The best entries, besides winning prizes, are published by 
    Viking-Penguin.  The first book released three years ago was titled
    "It was a Dark and Stormy Night."  Last year "Son of It was a Dark
    and Stormy Night" was published and work is under way on "Bride
    of It was a Dark and Stormy Night".
    
    Rules:
    
    Sentances may be of any length and entrants may submit more than
    one, but all entries must be original and unpublished.
    
    Entryies will be judged by categories, from "general" to detective,
    western, science fiction, romance, purple prose...  There will be
    overall winners, as well as category winners.
    
    Entries should be submitted on index cards, the sentance on one
    side and the entrant's name, address and phone number on the other.
    
    The deadline is April 15th, 1988, to coincide with that other April
    15th deadline.
    
    Send entries to:
    
    	Bulwer-Litton Fiction Contest
    	Depatment of English
    	San Jose State University
    	San Jose, CA. 95192-0090
    
    Might be fun to post them here also.
    
    Larry

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371.1more winnersREGENT::POWERSThu Jun 25 1987 10:2625
Three more of this year's winning entries....

from the "adventure" category....

	"On this God-forsaken speck of land in the middle of nowhere,
	with no sounds save the pounding of the waves and the raucous
	cry of the gulls to  break the silence, with no company save one
	hairy, disgusting goat, Crusoe's days passed like kidney stones 
	until finally, inevitably, the goat began to look good to him."
			- Dylan Worthy, Washington, DC

from the "vile puns" category (surely a winner in this file)...

	"Dawn crept slowly over the sparkling emerald expanse of the
	country club golf course, trying in vain to remember where she
	had dropped her car keys."
			- Sally Sams, Ben Lomond, CA

and a "dishonorable mention"...

	"Although Sarah had an abnormal fear of mice, it did not keep her
	from eeking out a living at the local pet store."
			- R.W. O'Bryan, Perrysburg, Ohio

- tom]
371.2Rules?MARVIN::KNOWLESFri Jun 26 1987 09:066
    Re: .0
    
    Are the categories fixed?  If so, do you have time to type them
    in?
    
    Bob 'Call me Ishmael' Knowles
371.3Stictly Ad-HocTHEBAY::WAKEMANLATall Duck and HandsomeMon Jun 29 1987 21:0610
    re .2
    
    The article I appropriated the base topic from left me with the
    impression that the number of categories was not fixed, but that
    they would be created as needed and as long as there were prizes
    available to award.  The list I presented seems to be the most stable
    categories to date.
    
    Larry
    
371.4Oh, that prose!DDIF::RUSTThu May 21 1992 20:4027
    The winning entry in the 10th Annual Bulwer-Lytton Fiction Contest:
    
	"As the newest Lady Turnpot descended into the kitchen 
	wrapped only in her celery-green dressing gown, 
	her creamy bosom rising and falling like a 
	temperamental souffle, her tart mouth pursed in 
	distaste, the sous-chef whispered to the scullery boy, 
	'I don't know what to make of her.'"

		- by Laurel Fortuner of Sacramento, CA (written while 
    		waiting for an interior design class to begin at 
    		Sacramento State University)
    
    Runner-up:
    
    	"The dirty gray sky hung over the city like the sneeze shield
    	on God's salad bar, as Jake watched from his grimy window,
    	cursing the spectacle that, to him, was just so much of God's
    	broccoli and carrot medley in light hollandaise, which he,
    	like the president, just couldn't stomach anymore."
    
    		- Robert Brown, of Naples, FL
    
    	[Hey, I thought "the sneeze shield on God's salad bar" was a
    	_great_ image!]
    
    -b
371.512th Bulwer-Lytton contest resultsGENSIS::LAVEYDr. Heckyll & Mr. JiveFri May 14 1993 11:2267
Subj:	FWD: The annual Bulwer-Lytton contest awards
[forwards trashed]

From news.u.washington.edu!uunet!decwrl!decwrl!looking!clarinews
Thu May 13 13:26:07 PDT 1993

        SAN JOSE, Calif. (UPI) -- For a Georgia baker, winning top honors in
the annual Bulwer-Lytton contest for bad fiction was in the numbers.
        William W. ``Buddy'' Ocheltree, 39, of Lilburn, Ga., submitted the
winning entry announced Wednesday in the 12th annual competition, a
send-up of hard-boiled detective fiction:
        ``She really wasn't my type -- a hard-looking, untalented reporter for
the local cat-box liner; but the first second that third-rate
representative of the fourth estate cracked open a new fifth of Scotch,
my sixth sense said seventh heaven was as close as an eighth note from
Beethoven's 'Ninth Symphony,' so, nervous as a tenth grader drowning in
eleventh-hour cramming for a physics exam, I swept her into my longing
arms, and while humming 'The Twelfth Of Never,' I got lucky on Friday
the thirteenth.''
        Scott Rice, a professor of English at San Jose State University, said
Ocheltree ``prefers that his entry be read with a Humphrey Bogart voice.
''
        The winner was chosen from more than 8,000 entries from all over the
United States as well as Britain, Germany, South Africa, Japan,
Australia and Saudi Arabia.
        Rice said Ocheltree will receive ``a cheap word processor'' as his
prize.
        The bad writing contest, named for Victorian novelist Edward Bulwer-
Lytton, challenges writers to top his opening line to ``Paul Clifford'':
``It was a dark and stormy night.''
        The judges, described by Rice as an ``undistinguished panel'' of
professors and friends of the San Jose State English Department, also
named winners in specific categories, including detective stories, 
``purple prose,'' children's literature, romance, science fiction and 
``vile puns.''
        The winner of the science fiction category, Tom Butler of
Tallahassee, Fla., cast off the high-tech terms common to that genre in
favor simpler language:
        ``Those alarm things that make a real loud honking kind of noise were
going off as Captain James Hurley stared at the screen that showed him
the stuff outside in space, while he sat in the chair that the captain
sits in and slowly reached for the control panel for the thing that
makes the ship go real fast.''
        Richard Patching, of Calgary, Alberta, submitted the opening line
that was the best of the worst in the adventure genre:
        ``As the finely honed points of the magnificent bull elk's antlers
perforated his spleen, lungs and lower colon, Lenny the Grifter wished
he had stayed working the street in Times Square, instead of going up to
the Rockies where this dumb animal had figured out that three-card monte
was a con, and gored him.''
        This ``vile pun'' was submitted by Barbara Stegmen of Del Mar, Calif.
:
        ``After working the crowd, the autograph hound lacked only the
signature of the vice president's wife, so when he spotted her at the
far edge of the field, he called to his friend, ''Come on, it's a long
way to Tipper, Harry!``
        An entry from Marc Roberge of Santa Rosa, Calif., was chosen in the 
``special multicultural category'':
        ``Try as he might, Guido Smith could not get into the spirit of
Oktoberfest this year; his laissez-faire cum manana attitude made him
want to say sayonara to the whole shebang.''
        Rick Vetter of Riverside, Calif., took one of three ``miscellaneous
dishonorable mentions'':
        ``Brenda Malthwit: attorney at law, young, attractive, well educated,
and full of self-confidence; a woman who, as swiftly as her lascivious
male co-workers undressed her with their eyes, would mentally fold the
clothes neatly and put them in a pile.''
371.6Lastest "Winners" in the Bulwer-Lytton Fiction ContestTELGAR::WAKEMANLAlike a silicon armadilloWed May 18 1994 12:0752
Reprinted without permission, Copyright Associated Press
From the Contra Costa Times, 18-May-1994

Suddenly, a really awful sentence rang out
by Richard Cole
Associated Press

SAN FRANCISCO - It was the best of prose, it was the worst  of prose.

Well, actually, it was just the worst of prose, and it  included the
line "a shattered computer terminal lying there like a silicon armadillo
left to rot on the information  highway."

On Tuesday, San Jose State English Professor Scott Rice  announced the
winners of the 1994 Bulwer-Lytton Fiction  Contest, many of whom allowed
themselves to be identified.

Rice named the competition, now in its 13th year, after the British
author who opened the 1830 novel "Paul Clifford" with the immortal - or
undead - line, "It was a dark and stormy night."

This year's winning entries were no better, Rice said proudly. Hacks
from every state of the union entered, along with alleged  writers from
Canada, Great Britain, Germany, Australia,  Switzerland and Ghana.

This year's winner was Larry Brill, and anchor for Austin Texas, NBC
affiliate KXAN.  He agreed he has an unfair advantage as a television
news writer.

Brill's entry:

"As the fading light of a dying day filtered through the window blinds,
Roger stood over his victim with a smoking .45, surprised at the
serenity that filled him after pumping six slugs into the  bloodless
tyrant that had mocked him day after day, and then he shuffled out of
the office with one last look back at the  shattered computer terminal
Lying there like a silicon armadillo left to rot on the information
highway."

Brill will receive a cheap nonarmadillo word processor as his  prize,
said Price.

The vile pun award went to Richard Patching, of Calgary, Canada, with an
Arnold Schwarzenegger stretch:

"The ex-weightlifter-director started the rehearsals by telling us,
'Okay, ve gonna be baroque composers in dis one; you be Telleman, you be
Vivaldi, and I'll be Bach.'"

The romance category prize went to Gini Jones of Santa Fe, N.M., with an
entry that included a hero "his skin aglow with a tan of catfish-fried
perfection."
371.7JIT081::DIAMOND$ SET MIDNIGHTWed May 18 1994 19:082
    Too bad we didn't submit the first completed story from somewhere in
    1008.*
371.8DRDAN::KALIKOWWorld-Wide Web: Postmodem CultureThu May 19 1994 05:159
    Heaven Forfend!!!
    
    Had we done so, we would have undone simply YEARS of excellent
    Marketing, Customer Visibility, Logo Improvements, and so forth!!
    
    Hmmm...
    
    Well it couldn't hurt! :-)